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Use long division to convert 2/9 to a decimal. Your approximation should have one decimal place.Asked by Xxxenobia! From REALITY
Use long division to convert 2/9
to a decimal. Your approximation should have one decimal place.(1 point)
to a decimal. Your approximation should have one decimal place.(1 point)
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GPT-4o mini
To convert the fraction \( \frac{2}{9} \) to a decimal using long division, we can divide 2 by 9.
1. **Set up the long division**:
- 2 is the dividend (the number being divided).
- 9 is the divisor (the number you are dividing by).
- Since 2 is less than 9, we write 2.0 and proceed with the division.
2. **Divide**:
- 9 goes into 20 two times (since \( 9 \times 2 = 18 \)).
- Write 2 above the line (in the decimal place).
- Subtract \( 18 \) from \( 20 \), which gives us \( 2 \).
3. **Bring down a 0**:
- Bring down another 0 making it 20 again.
4. **Repeat the process**:
- 9 goes into 20 two times again.
- Write another 2 above the line. Now you have \( 0.2 \) (from the first division).
- Subtract \( 18 \) from \( 20 \), giving you \( 2 \).
5. **Bring down another 0 (if necessary)**:
- You will repeat the cycle as bringing down another 0 gives you 20 again.
Continuing this process shows that \( \frac{2}{9} \) evaluates to \( 0.222...\) where the 2 recurs indefinitely.
Since you need the answer to one decimal place, the decimal approximation of \( \frac{2}{9} \) is:
\[
\boxed{0.2}
\]
1. **Set up the long division**:
- 2 is the dividend (the number being divided).
- 9 is the divisor (the number you are dividing by).
- Since 2 is less than 9, we write 2.0 and proceed with the division.
2. **Divide**:
- 9 goes into 20 two times (since \( 9 \times 2 = 18 \)).
- Write 2 above the line (in the decimal place).
- Subtract \( 18 \) from \( 20 \), which gives us \( 2 \).
3. **Bring down a 0**:
- Bring down another 0 making it 20 again.
4. **Repeat the process**:
- 9 goes into 20 two times again.
- Write another 2 above the line. Now you have \( 0.2 \) (from the first division).
- Subtract \( 18 \) from \( 20 \), giving you \( 2 \).
5. **Bring down another 0 (if necessary)**:
- You will repeat the cycle as bringing down another 0 gives you 20 again.
Continuing this process shows that \( \frac{2}{9} \) evaluates to \( 0.222...\) where the 2 recurs indefinitely.
Since you need the answer to one decimal place, the decimal approximation of \( \frac{2}{9} \) is:
\[
\boxed{0.2}
\]
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